Curried Goats
Diamond Member
- Aug 28, 2021
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Telling me to brush up on something isn't a demonstration of your understanding of that thing. The double slit experiment shows that atoms behave as both a particle and a wave. 'Spooky action' describes an aspect of quantum mechanics that seemingly breaks the speed limit set by Einstein’s theory of Special Relativity. The thing is its not really spooky action at a distance. In the classical way of looking at things if we observe two objects separated by time and space the only way for one to have an effect on the other is for them to interact in some way through matter or energy. Matter or energy must travel through the space between them which takes a certain amount of time. With entangled particles information about one particle can tell you instantly about its entangled pair even if that entangled object is some distance away. This appears to at first to break the cosmic speed limit except it doesn't. If you go back to the double slit theory we know that atoms behave as both particles and waves and entangled objects are like the light or atoms being pushed through the slit. On the other side the waves collide and combine and thats how you get the wave interference pattern on the screen behind the slits. This interference pattern is a representation of the entangled wave function that two entangled objects have. It's not two separate objects exchanging information between one another instantaneously over a distance its one wave function that collapses on any measurement and allows you to know information about any other objects entangled in the same wave function (at that exact moment). Once the wave function collapses the entanglement is broken and they continue on acting like any other classical object.Quantum mechanics seems random until understood. Brush up on the double slit experiment and Einstein’s ‘spooky action.’
Anyway.... here a nice short little video that explains the inherent randomness in the universe.
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